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Heaton - Discovering Wilfred Heaton | Divine Art DDX21138

Heaton - Discovering Wilfred Heaton

Ł11.50

New Item

Label: Divine Art

Cat No: DDX21138

Barcode: 0809730113826

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 1

Expected Release Date: 31st October 2025

Item is currently due
31st October 2025.

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Contents

About

Wilfred Heaton (1918-2000) is a name well-revered in brass band circles, but nearly unknown in the wider world of classical music. Discovering Wilfred Heaton seeks to change that with no fewer than seven premiere recordings from pianists Murray McLachlan and Rose McLachlan, tenor James Gilchrist, and flautist Alex Jakeman.

The album is anchored by the first recording of Heaton’s monumental Piano Sonata, which was performed in 2024 to rapturous applause by Murray McLachlan at Manchester’s Stoller Hall. The Sonata, composed in the 1950s, is a work of striking ambition and depth. Harmonically daring, emotionally raw, and technically formidable, it stands comparison with the great mid-century sonatas of Bartók and Prokofiev. From the muscular counterpoint of its opening, through a grief-tinged slow movement and a dazzling finale, Heaton’s sonata reveals a powerful, individual voice – he was fearless in embracing big themes, bold melodies, and contemporary idioms.

Also featured are first recordings of the Three Pieces for Piano (1954), and the poignant piano suite Pilgrim Reflections, adapted from Heaton’s mystery play Pilgrim’s Song. A selection of Heaton’s rarely-heard songs – written in his youth and again in later life – are performed here by the acclaimed tenor James Gilchrist, accompanied by Rose McLachlan. Together, these works illuminate Heaton’s stylistic evolution: his command of bitonality, rhythmic complexity, and melodic invention, rooted in a deep understanding of Bach and Brahms, and influenced by Walton, Hindemith, Bartók and Stravinsky.

Heaton’s career was shaped by a lifelong tension between personal conviction and professional ambition. A deeply private Yorkshireman, he turned away from a mainstream musical path after early promise – studying with Mátyás Seiber and submitting works to the Society for the Promotion of New Music – choosing instead a life of teaching, reflection, and selective composition. The result is a body of work of exceptional quality, much of it unpublished or unheard until now.

This album is not only a significant act of musical archaeology by Heaton’s biographer and editor Paul Hindmarsh – it is a compelling argument for Heaton’s inclusion among Britain’s most original post-war composers.

Track highlights:
- Piano Sonata (premiere recording)
- Three Pieces for Piano (1954)
- Pilgrim Reflections (suite for solo piano)

For fans of: Bartók, Britten, Prokofiev, William Walton, Elisabeth Lutyens, early Tippett.

An essential discovery for collectors, performers, and listeners drawn to British 20th-century repertoire beyond the usual names.

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